Depiction of the Menorah sketched in Maimonides' own hand. |
Contrary to this midrash, which
makes the lighting of the Menorah the purview of the High Priest and his
family, the Talmud tells us that in the Temple in Jerusalem, the lighting of
the Menorah could be done by a layperson. The only duty restricted to the
Priest was to trim the wicks of the lamps. Once the Priest prepared the wicks
for lighting, he could bring the Menorah out from the holy area where the layperson
was not allowed, and the layperson could light the Menorah. Then the Priest would
return the lit Menorah to its proper place in the Temple precinct.
It must have been considered a
great honor for a layperson to have the privilege of lighting the menorah in
the Temple in Jerusalem. To imagine what this must have meant, think of the excitement
a person might feel were they asked to throw the first pitch of a Cubs baseball
game. Or how it must feel to be asked to ring the bell to start the trading day
on Wall Street. That is what it must have felt like to be asked to light the Menorah
at the Temple in Jerusalem. And like those two secular events in our own time,
the honor must have been given in recognition of an achievement or of a high
position in government or industry. You cannot just walk off the street and throw
the first pitch of a baseball game!
If the actual lighting of the
Menorah can be done by a layperson, what does that teach us about what is left
of the mitzvah for the priest – the preparing and the trimming of the wick. We can reason from this that it is a greater
mitzvah to prepare the candle for lighting than it is for the lighting itself. This teaches us that preparing to do a mitzvah
is more important than the performance of the mitzvah itself. Holiness is found
in the preparation for a mitzvah even more so than carrying it out.
It is something to think about the
next time we are studying a Torah portion to read it in synagogue, when we are
getting dressed up to attend a service, when we are baking challah for Friday
night or setting the table for our Shabbat dinner. The mitzvah is not only in chanting
before the congregation in the synagogue, or in attending the service, or in
eating the Challah, or in dining together. The greater mitzvah, according to
the Rabbis, comes in the preparation to do all these things. These are the
holiest of moments. We need to appreciate them as such.
Shabbat Shalom
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